Baby boomers are beginning to use social networking sites, according to a new "Entertainment Trends in America" study by The NPD Group in Port Washington, NY. The study found that 41% of boomers have visited a social networking site, and 61% have visited a streaming video site.
No matter the industry, annual reports have been seen primarily as a tool for reporting financials to investors. One hospital, though, is holding the annual report to a completely different standard: as a vehicle for fundraising, involvement, and community awareness.
Monroe Carell Jr. Children's Hospital at Vanderbilt in Nashville started doing annual reports after a move to a new facility. "We started doing this to make ourselves more known," says Jessica Ennis, publications editor for Vanderbilt Children's Hospital
. "We had never done one before I got here but we knew we wanted to use the report as a multipurpose piece."
From the start, Ennis and others worked to find a way to create something different to fulfill the facility's needs. "We sat down to think about a way to tell what we're doing in a different way," says Ennis, "I certainly don't like to read the typical report so I didn't want to make one."
Straying from the 'typical' proved to be easy once a creative focus was established. Vanderbilt Children's Hospital decided that the best way to convey the information for a Children's Hospital would be through the story of a child. The annual report and the child's real-life story were then transformed into a physical children's book that Ennis wrote.
The child that was chosen had been featured briefly in another Vanderbilt Children's Hospital publication after having undergone a heart procedure at Vanderbilt Children's Hospital. "I thought he would be best for the illustration, a cute little red-headed boy," says Ennis. She spent hours with the boy and his family trying to get a feel for what they went through at the hospital, and the things he liked to play with and do.
The story describes the boy's condition and procedure in an adult- and child-friendly way. The story takes the reader through the boy's experiences, to the people he met, the things he saw at Vanderbilt Children's Hospital, and the things he did. In other words, Vanderbilt Children's Hospital managed to inconspicuously deliver the information within a typical annual report in a subtle yet interesting way. And the typical financials? Nestled within every book on a bookmark.
"What's really unique about the book was the extra mileage it's gotten," says Ennis. "People who saw it were so interested in it that they insisted that we put them in our gift shop for fundraising, a congenial heart organization contacted me about ordering some to put on its Web site as a resource. There have been newspaper articles about it and it has been read in kindergarten classrooms. I even saw it for resale on Amazon."
"Obviously, we got mileage that we never expected from taking a different approach," says Ennis. "It's been neat to see that it has gotten as far as it has and that's something you would never see with a typical annual report."
Kandace McLaughlin is an editor with HealthLeaders magazine. Send her Campaign Spotlight ideas at kmclaughlin@healthleadersmedia.com If you are a marketer submitting a campaign on behalf of your facility or client, please ensure you have permission before doing so.
Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell and House Democrats say they will renew the Mcare abatement program if the Republican-run Senate agrees to extend healthcare coverage to more state citizens. This is prompting physicians statewide to worry about the future of the rebate program.
A bill being proposed by House Ways and Means Health Subcommittee Chairman Fortney (Pete) Stark (D-CA), would create a nationwide EMR system using Medicare reimbursement to push healthcare providers to adopt the new technology. The bill would also use a matching grant program to help prompt adoption of an EMR system.
Clostridium difficile is fast emerging as one of the most dangerous and virulent foes in hospitals' war against antibiotic "superbugs." C. diff is spawning infections in hospitals in the U.S. and abroad that can lead to severe diarrhea, ruptured colons, perforated bowels, kidney failure, blood poisoning, and death. Despite hospitals gaining control of other drug-resistant infections such as MRSA, rates of C. diff are rising sharply, and a recent, more virulent strain of the bug is causing more severe complications.
Addressing an ethics dispute involving a public board overseeing construction of a hospital in St. Bernard Parish in Louisiana, a divided Parish Council has taken the first step toward replacing the board with a new one. The council voted 4-2 to introduce an ordinance to create a new five-member board charged with building a hospital to replace the one destroyed during Hurricane Katrina. The ordinance is set for a final vote in October, but it could be moot if parish officials negotiate an agreement with two doctors serving on the current board to resign amid conflict-of-interest concerns.